EN | UA
EN | UA

Help Support

Back

Microfracture, the first-line treatment for small articular cartilage defects of the knee

Microfracture, the first-line treatment for small articular cartilage defects of the knee Microfracture, the first-line treatment for small articular cartilage defects of the knee
Microfracture, the first-line treatment for small articular cartilage defects of the knee Microfracture, the first-line treatment for small articular cartilage defects of the knee

What's new?

With significant satisfying outcomes, Mirofracture is considered as a first-line treatment alternative to address small articular cartilage defects of the knee joint.

Microfracture represents as a first-line approach to manage minor articular cartilage defects of the knee joint and to produce satisfying functional improvement and pain relief at the mid-term and consequently, evident from a systematic review of the contemporary literature conducted by Patrick Orth and colleagues of Saarland University, Homburg, Germany.


Cochrane Library databases, PubMed, and ScienceDirect from 2013 to 2018 were searched for clinical trials on microfracture therapy and study design, patient demographics, and pre-, intra-, and postoperative findings were derived. PRISMA guidelines were implemented. Modified Coleman Methodology Score (CMS) was used to assess the methodological quality of the included studies and generate aggregated data.


A total of 18 studies (1830 defects) were analyzed. Eight out them were cohort studies without a comparison group. Due to the lack of control groups and structural repair tissue evaluation, low patient numbers, inhomogeneity in outcome parameters, and short follow-up periods, the quality of the overall study was moderate. The treatment was implemented at 43.4 ± 68.0 months of symptom duration. The failure rates of the procedure at five years and ten years were found to be were 11–27%and 6–32%, respectively. Ten studies went through imaging analysis, reported second-look arthroscopies twice and showed well-integrated fibrocartilaginous repair tissue. A further high-quality and standardized study designs will clarify optimal indications for the microfracture regarding cartilage repair strategies in better ways.  

Source:

Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy

Article:

Microfracture for cartilage repair in the knee: a systematic review of the contemporary literature.

Authors:

Patrick Orth et al.

Comments (0)

You want to delete this comment? Please mention comment Invalid Text Content Text Content cannot me more than 1000 Something Went Wrong Cancel Confirm Confirm Delete Hide Replies View Replies View Replies en ru
Try: